Sod-House Days
Letters from a Kansas Homesteader, 1877-78
Howard Ruede
Edited by John Ise
With a new foreword by Scott G. McNall
xxxiv, 254 pages, 5-1/2 x 8-1/2
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-0234-6, $14.95
Howard Ruede was twenty-two years
old in March of 1877 when he rode on a freight wagon into Osborne
City, a community in west-central Kansas. A young man of courage,
common sense, and independence, Ruede was filled with the optimism
and determination typical of the men and women who took up the
challenge of homesteading on the prairie.
Brought together by economist John Ise and first published
in 1937, Sod-House Days is a collection of the letters
Ruede wrote to his family in Pennsylvania chronicling his first
year in Kansas. In minute detail these letters show the hard,
wearying work faced by homesteaders in the 1870s, their almost
unbelievable poverty, the hardships of poor food, inadequate
clothing, crowding, unsanitary conditions, the lack of decent
drinking water, the bedbugs and fleas, flies and mosquitoes.
We see Ruede struggling to stay out of debt, walking miles to
pick up the mail or to visit a neighbor, working until his bare
feet are rubbed raw by the wheat stubble of the fields, going
without meat because he hasn't been able to kill a jackrabbit,
cooking biscuits in a kettle over his sod fireplace. Taken together,
his observations constitute a careful and graphic picture of
the pioneer community in which he lived, one that joins recent
studies such as Sandra Myres's Westering Women and the Frontier
Experience in presenting an accurate, if brutal, picture
of life on the western frontier.
In a perceptive new foreword, sociologist Scott G. McNall
considers the context within which the story of Howard Ruede
unfolded. He delineates the forces and factors that contributed
to the rapid settlement of the Great Plains. He reads the dominant
themes that run through Ruede's letters: an almost religious
faith in progress and hard work, and a tremendous concern for
the idea of community. He also addresses a central question:
What made these people stay? McNall writes, "The value of
these materials has been not at all reduced by the passage of
time. . . . [This] is the story of an ordinary person with heroic
dimensions. Reading these letters, we see what values people
had which allowed them to try, and then try again, after they
had seen their efforts destroyed by drought, grasshoppers, prairie
fires, and other disasters. . . . It is a story of struggle with
the environment, of creative adaption to circumstance, of people
as active participants in creating the society around them."
"Gives a rich and detailed picture of a place, a time,
a personality, and a stage in our national development [that
has] considerable historic value. But its interest goes beyond
any appeal to students alone. It is stimulating and suggestive
reading for the general public--who may well find in it something
of the quality of a historical novel."--New York Times
Book Review
"[These letters] supply first-hand information, of value
to the historian, concerning the condition of agriculture in
Kansas at a time when the seeds of agrarian discontent were being
widely sown."--Times Literary Supplement
"Unlike most rural folk, homesteader Ruede possessed
the ability of expressing himself clearly in writing. His word
pictures are vivid accounts of experiences gained in carving
a farm from the Western plains."--Rural Sociology
JOHN ISE, author of Sod and
Stubble, was professor of economics at the University
of Kansas from 1916 to 1955.
SCOTT G. McNALL, chairman of the Department of Sociology
at the University of Kansas, is the author of some two dozen
articles and thirteen books, including Sociology through Social
History: Great Plains Families, 1860-1980 (with Sally McNall).
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